Green Bay Packers: Road to XLV

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All Rise...

Judge Jim Thomas was looking for the Road to the Championship, but instead found himself on the Highway to Hell.

The Charge

Super Bowl XLV featured two of the most storied teams in the NFL, as well as
a quarterback, Aaron Rodgers, bidding to step out from the considerably long
shadow of Packer legend Brett Favre.

It was, as they say, a date with destiny.

The Case

A timeworn adage holds that, to make it to the championship, you have to
avoid the injury bug. In 2010, the Green Bay Packers became the exception that
proved the rule. The Packers limped into the playoffs—literally, having
compiled a list of injuries that would have overwhelmed a MASH unit. Fifteen
players ended up on injured reserve, and several others missed multiple games.
In addition, the Packers were going the wild card route, meaning that they would
be playing on the road all the way to the Super Bowl. Given that Green Bay had
lost its last three home games of the season, it didn't bode well for the
Packers.

Green Bay Packers: Road to XLV trims the original Fox Sports
broadcasts down to the bare minimum; all of the extraneous filler, from player
introductions to challenge delays, is excised as well, getting each game down to
roughly two hours.

• January 9, 2011—NFC Wild Card Game—Green Bay 21,
Philadelphia 16 Green Bay used a controlled passing game to build a
14-3 halftime lead; after the teams exchanged touchdowns in the third quarter,
the Eagles pulled within striking distance, but the Pack intercepted Michael
Vick with 36 seconds left to seal the win.

• January 15, 2011—NFC Divisional Playoff—Green
Bay 48, Atlanta 21 Atlanta was the top seed in the NFC, and looked
good early on, but it all went to hell in the second quarter, with the Packers
racking up 28 points. Two more unanswered TDs in the third effectively put the
game out of reach.

• January 23, 2011—NFC Championship Game—Green Bay
21, Chicago 14The Bears and Packers are longtime rivals, but this was
only the second time they had met in the playoffs (the first was all the way
back in 1941). The Packers used their controlled passing game to build a
14-point lead, and Chicago could never quite get their offense on track.

• February 6, 2011—Super Bowl XLV—Pittsburgh 25,
Green Bay 31 The injury bug refused to let up on Green Bay, with two
starters going down in the first half—receiver Donald Driver and
cornerback Charles Woodson. The Packers threatened to blow out the Steelers
early on, opening up a 14-0 lead in the first quarter, but the Steelers refused
to go gentle into that good night. They slowly but surely crawled back into the
game, and after a third quarter in which they simply shut the Pack down
completely, they were poised to take control of the game when a disastrous
fumble on the first play of the fourth quarter set up Green Bay near midfield;
they promptly drove for a touchdown. The Steelers battled back yet again,
cutting the lead to 28-25 with seven minutes left; Rodgers drove the Packers
down for a FG with two minutes left, putting the Steelers in a position to win
the game with a touchdown. Ben Roethlisberger was unable to convert a fourth
down, and the Packers ran out the clock to secure the win. It might not have
been the prettiest Super Bowl, but it was certainly a competitive one.

The decision to release Green Bay Packers: Road to XLV only on DVD is
a puzzler. A few years ago, a standard-def release would have been sufficient;
these days, though, when around sixty percent of U.S. households owning HDTVs,
people are expecting more from sporting events than "merely adequate."
Images are sharp enough on sideline closeups, but for the wider gameplay shots,
problems are evident, with soft images and color bleeding. In short, it looks
like a standard definition television broadcast. Perhaps NFL Films and or
Vivendi Entertainment figured that the limited market made a Blu-ray release
impractical? I dunno, but my guess is that most serious fans won't be happy with
the video quality. The sound quality is…again, about what you would expect
from a SD broadcast.

The only extra is a trimmed-down version of the postgame press conference.
On the down side, they don't include the presentation of the Lombardi Trophy; on
the up side, they don't include the godawful halftime show with the Black Eyed
Peas.

The Verdict

Green Bay Packers: Road to XLV: Good games, weak presentation. Vivendi
Entertainment is flagged fifteen yards for unsportsmanlike conduct for not
releasing this set on Blu-Ray, or at the very least for not using a better
master for the set. The games themselves are entertaining, but the presentation
does a disservice to the games and to the fans.